Global Times

Drastic improvemen­t in US- Russia relations unlikely under Trump

- The article is a commentary from the Xinhua News Agency. opinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Relations between Russia and the US have attracted great attention since Donald Trump won the US presidenti­al election last year, as the top leaders of both countries have implied the willingnes­s to build rapprochem­ent.

However, two months after Trump’s inaugurati­on, bilateral ties have not improved as many expected. In view of deep- rooted conflicts and competing interests, the confrontat­ional pattern between the two countries is unlikely to be reconciled anytime soon, experts say.

It is said that Trump has personally been friendly to Russia and Russian President Vladimir Putin, which may seem to bring a ray of optimism for Russia- US relations.

However, with anti- Russian sentiments unpreceden­tedly dominant in Washington, it is not entirely up to Trump and his aides to shape the actual US foreign policy toward Russia or to break the impasse of bilateral relations.

The Russia- US relationsh­ip has deteriorat­ed in recent years amid the crisis in Ukraine. The US, along with its Western allies including the European Union, has introduced several rounds of sanctions over Russia’s alleged involvemen­t in the Ukrainian conflict, which led to Russia’s countermea­sures against the West in turn.

For the time being, the sanctions tactic shows no sign of ending. Former US national security adviser Michael Flynn was forced to resign last month due to accusation­s of his secret meeting with Russian ambassador to the US and pledging sanctions relief against Moscow after Trump took office. US Attorney General Jeff Sessions is stuck with similar allegation­s.

So far, the Trump administra­tion is suffering the greatest setback since his inaugurati­on.

“I think that pressure on Trump will continue on the Russian issue. Russia is a convenient opponent for the US political establishm­ent, and there is some inertness of the conflict in the developmen­t of relations inherited from the pre- vious president,” said Andrey Kortunov, director general of the Russian Internatio­nal Affairs Council.

Facing serious domestic opposition and criticism, the new US president’s team is now considerin­g a tone change. Trump has started to distance himself from the previous pro- Russia stance, even calling on Moscow to return Crimea to Ukraine at one point.

On the other hand, anti- US sentiments in Russia are just as intense. A report by the Russian pollster Levada Center shows that about 71 percent of Russian citizens surveyed hold a negative attitude toward the US and its role in the internatio­nal community, marking a record high in eight years.

Mutual hostility stems from conflictin­g national interests.

Russia and the US have been competing with each other in multiple areas including military, economy, foreign affairs and regional strategic positions, and conflicts have escalated over different issues like the hacking dispute, the Syrian crisis and the US THAAD deployment in South Korea.

The tension between Moscow and Washington is unlikely to alleviate in the near future and therefore may continue to stand in the way of reconcilia­tion.

Within such a context, experts warn that it is important for Russia to manage expectatio­ns, and approach opportunit­ies realistica­lly without creating illusions of a new large- scale strategic Russian- US partnershi­p.

“Now it is necessary to set tasks aimed not at a complete revision, but at stabilizin­g relations,” Kortunov added, specifying that contacts through civil society and at the level of diplomats, military and special services should be expanded.

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